Following the ongoing success of The House on Tremawney Hill, I am currently working on a sequel.The working title of this is Murder at Tremawney Heights, which I hope will prove to be as popular! I am currently about halfway through the first draft and hope to have the book available in a few weeks' time. Murder at Tremawney Heights follows on from The House on Tremawney Hill, although it can equally be read on its own. We meet back up with Alison, Lorna and Denise and the story this time is told from the point of view of Denise, who's trying to make the difficult transition from teenager in adulthood. With a gorgeous and rich new boyfriend and his peculiar family to deal with, the last thing she needs is to discover a body! But discover one she does and from then on is drawn into a whodunnit where she needs to find the culprit before the murderer strikes again!

Hi. Well you really took the words right out of my mouth (and this comes from a first book author from just over the borders of Bedfordshire, Northamptonshire, but living in Spain atm. By the ay I'm home very soon and I would love to meet you???). I have ranted and raved about these very minor and semi-literate authors who seem to be able to turn out biographies at the drop of a hat or rather at the drop of a ghost writer's hat. I think the mainstream publishers are losing the plot, each wanting to capitalise on anything that will line their coffers, and if that means mainstreaming rubbish then so be it. As for content, I wrote my first book Just one Year and self published. What I want to write, and what I will always try to write, is a story; a beginning, a middle and an end. I don't need to bare my soul, I definitely don't want to sensationalise, I just want to write novels that won't make people slit their wrists, because there's enough in the world to make people do that nowadays), and are fairly contemporary. I subscribe to a writer's forum who continually berate the whole 'art' of self publishing. They don't actually know how much work and skilled is needed to get a book published, and their posts are so pompous, each trying to outdo the other in archaic and mostly gobbledegook English that normal readers wouldn't understand. Shall we just all get on with what we are doing, us brave self-publishers. You know, we are not all vanity publishers!